Instructional Video4:13
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How does your body process medicine? - Celine Valery

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Have you ever wondered what happens to a painkiller, like ibuprofen, after you swallow it? Medicine that slides down your throat can help treat a headache, a sore back, or a throbbing sprained ankle. But how does it get where it needs to...
Instructional Video2:53
SciShow

How Can One Person's Blood Save 2 Million Babies?

12th - Higher Ed
An Australian man named James Harrison holds the world record for most blood donations. His blood has saved the lives of millions of newborn babies, but how can one man's blood help babies all over the world?
Instructional Video16:43
TED Talks

Simon Berrow: How do you save a shark you know nothing about?

12th - Higher Ed
They're the second-largest fish in the world, they're almost extinct, and we know almost nothing about them. In this talk, Simon Berrow describes the fascinating basking shark ("great fish of the sun" in Irish), and the exceptional --...
Instructional Video0:42
SciShow

Not quite an infinite liver hack #shorts #throwbackthursday #science #scishow

12th - Higher Ed
Not quite an infinite liver hack #shorts #throwbackthursday #science #scishow
Instructional Video18:49
TED Talks

Catherine Mohr: Surgery's past, present and robotic future

12th - Higher Ed
Surgeon and inventor Catherine Mohr tours the history of surgery (and its pre-painkiller, pre-antiseptic past), then demos some of the newest tools for surgery through tiny incisions, performed using nimble robot hands. Fascinating --...
Instructional Video3:39
SciShow

Is That a Cold or Are Your Organs Flipped?

12th - Higher Ed
If you’re someone who is constantly coughing up mucus, you might not actually have allergies. There’s a possibility that your organs are flipped and you don’t even know it!
Instructional Video5:52
SciShow

How Old Are You? Well, Your Liver Is 3

12th - Higher Ed
This week, a group of researchers use nuclear fallout to figure out how old liver cells are, while another gets one step closer to predicting volcanic eruptions.
Instructional Video3:03
SciShow

This Flatworm Remembers Things After You Cut Off Its Brain

12th - Higher Ed
Planarians are flatworms most known for being able to grow a new head if it gets cut off, but perhaps even stranger is the fact that their new head retains some of the memories from the old one.
Instructional Video8:23
Amoeba Sisters

Digestive System

12th - Higher Ed
Join the Amoeba Sisters for a brief tour through the human digestive system! This video will address major structures and functions including the esophagus, stomach, small intestine, and large intestine. This video also mentions chemical...
Instructional Video9:38
Amoeba Sisters

Excretory System and the Nephron

12th - Higher Ed
Join the Amoeba Sisters as they explore the excretory system! This video will first discuss two major functions of the excretory system before focusing on the nephron. The majority of this video will tour through the nephron while...
Instructional Video5:03
SciShow

How Liver Problems Can Lead to Brain Disease

12th - Higher Ed
We tend to focus on the brain in psychology, but it's part of an entire system! Other organs, even your liver, play a big role in psychological health.
Instructional Video4:22
SciShow

The Science (and Dangers) of Booze in Humans

12th - Higher Ed
Many of us choose to enjoy the effects of alcohol, and we know that drinking too much is a bad thing, but what kinds of things can actually happen when you drink too much for too long?
Instructional Video2:51
SciShow

Can You Keep Donating and Regrowing Your Liver?

12th - Higher Ed
Fun Fact: people can donate over half of their liver, and the tissue will grow back within a year! Knowing that, it seems pretty logical to assume that we could just keep donating and regrowing our livers over and over again, but is that...
Instructional Video2:26
SciShow

Why Is My Poop Green?

12th - Higher Ed
One of the most commonly googled questions in the world is why feces can be green. Well, Quick Questions has the answer!
Instructional Video3:02
SciShow

Is There a Way to Sober Up Faster?

12th - Higher Ed
You may be aware of certain hacks to sober up, but researchers have found a way to actually get booze out of our systems faster. And this discovery could help first responders when facing alcohol overdoses.
Instructional Video4:36
SciShow

Why You Should Care About the Plastic in Your Poop

12th - Higher Ed
A recent study has concluded that people all over the world are probably ingesting microscopic plastic all the time. Now scientists want to know where this plastic is coming from, how it ends up inside of us, and the damage it could do...
Instructional Video2:51
SciShow

The Secret Ingredient in Ruminant Spit

12th - Higher Ed
Every day, humans literally flush a valuable resource down the toilet: nitrogen. But there are some animals that have figured out a way to recycle the extra nitrogen in their bodies by moving it not to their livers, but to their mouths!
Instructional Video11:52
Crash Course

The Digestive System: CrashCourse Biology

12th - Higher Ed
Hank takes us through the bowels of the human digestive system and explains why it's all about surface area.
Instructional Video3:24
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What does the liver do? - Emma Bryce

Pre-K - Higher Ed
There's a factory inside you that weighs about 1.4 kilograms and runs for 24 hours a day. It's your liver: the heaviest organ in your body, which simultaneously acts as a storehouse, a manufacturing hub, and a processing plant. Emma...
Instructional Video4:55
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How your digestive system works - Emma Bryce

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Constantly churning inside of you, the digestive system performs a daily marvel: it transforms your food into the vital nutrients that sustain your body and ensure your survival. Emma Bryce traces food's nine-meter-long, 40-hour journey...
Instructional Video3:05
SciShow

Xenophyophores: The Strange Life of a Giant Single Cell

12th - Higher Ed
You may think of single-celled organisms as being microscopically small, but these ocean dwellers are a little heftier than that.
Instructional Video4:04
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Sugar: Hiding in plain sight - Robert Lustig

Pre-K - Higher Ed
While sugar is easy to spot in candy, soft drinks and ice cream, it also hides out in foods you might not expect -- including peanut butter, pasta sauce and even bologna! Robert Lustig decodes confusing labels and sugar's many aliases to...
Instructional Video10:17
Crash Course

Urinary System, part 1: Crash Course A&P

12th - Higher Ed
Even though you probably don't choose to spend a lot of time thinking about it, your pee is kind of a big deal. Today we're talking about the anatomy of your urinary system, and how your kidneys filter metabolic waste and balance salt...
Instructional Video4:08
SciShow

Why You Can't Really Sweat Out Toxins

12th - Higher Ed
The human body has a few built-in methods for getting rid of toxins. Sweating seems like it should be one of them, but it isn't doing as much as you think.